The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 27, 1929, Page 3

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— a RESER th m Page Three * —— | ‘SOCIAL DEM VIENNA, Sept. 26.—With the Communist Party calling the work- ers to arms against the fascist armed march of the Heimwehr on Vienna, the on-coming fascist coup, for which the road was opened by \the social democrats with their crushing of the Vienna rising of | 1927 and their continual lulling of | the workers to. non-resistance to fascism’s advance, took clearer shape today with the certainty that) fascigm’s “strong man,’ Johann| Schober, president of the Austrian | police, would succeed Ernest Streer- uwitz as Chancellor, The open action of three parties, the Agrarian, the Christian Social- ist and the Pan-German, and the silent colusion of the social demo- cratic party, by replacing Streeru- witz by Schober is taken in order to make the advance of the armed fascist Heimwehr on Vienna, dated for September 29, appear as the spontaneous demand of the masses for a fascist regime. Fascist demagogy, as a prelimin- ary propaganda, is rampant, Scho- ber claiming that he would take the post only if supported by “all par- ties,” that he was in ill health but would accept, providing he main-| tained also the post of president of police, and Streeruwitz’s game of yielding unwillingly to “popular” demand. Capitalist press reports that “even Streeruwitz” feels that Scho- ber is “the man for the post” and that Austria “needs a firm helms- man to preserve order,” betrays the whole game as well as its object— to resist by fascist terror the rising wave of proletarian revolt and build another link in the chain of counter-revolution for war on the Soviet Union. The rapidly advancing fascist coup in Austria takes place in sig- nificant concurrence with the revela- tion of secret negotiations between German army heads, German fas- cists and French imperialism, the aid of France to establish a fascist dictatorship in Germany. Not only by stich means is this intended to relieve France from the fear of revolt in France, which the rising Communist movement in Ger- many means, but to consolidate an assured fascist rule from Western Europe to and including Poland as preliminary to war on the Soviet Union. The following Inprecorr wireless from Berlin give the de- tails of this maneuver of French imperialism. * ~_ * (Wireless By Inprecorr) BERLIN, Germany, Sept. 26— The German Nationalist Party or- ganized a demonstration Monday in the Sports Palace against the Young Plan. The workers held a counter dem- onstration, not in favor of the Young Plan but against the anti-labor and jingoistic use of the occasion made by the Nationalists. The police clubbed the workers and arrested 17. The capitalist paper, Acht Uhr Aberidblatt published yesterday the basis of the negotiations between the German army heads, nationalist politicians and the French author- ities for a Franco-German alliance. Thése stipulations ate: - Six Points. 1. Pooling of the interests of the key industries of France and Ger- many: 2. A military alliance by which all existing frontiers are mutually guaranteed from the attack of a ‘third power, fixing the military strength in the ratio of five for France and three for Germany, with |, the technical level equal, and with | a Fran¢éo-German general staff com- | manding both armies and in co- operation with the Belgian army. i Korean Communist Arrested, Handed Over to Japanese SHANGHAI (By Mail)—Lyu-Un- Chen, oné of the leaders of the Communist Party of Korea and one of the most influential members of the temporary Korean government of 1919 who was wanted by the poli- tical police sinée many years during which he lived in continual danger of arrest, has; according to reports published in the Japanese press, been at last arrested in Shanghai by the Japanese police, At present Lyu-Un-Chen is de- tained in the prison of the Japanese end result of which would be the! consulate and is to be transported '\, to Korea where a death sentence or | at least penal servitude for life is _ awaiting him. 4 This arrest shows that a secret agreement is in existence between the consulates of the imperialist and the spies of Chian Kai-shek. Lyu- Un-Chen has been living in Shanghai with his wife and four children, Build Up the United Front_of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, OCRATS OPEN WAY TO FASCIST DICTATORSHIPS — IN ALL OF CENTRAL EUROPE Communists of Austria Call on Workers to Arm Against Fascist Attack {mperialists Uniting the Reaction to Resist Labor Revolt and to War on U.S.5. R. 8. The reparations agreements signed by France and Germany to remain temporarily unchanged. Pool Silesia Interests. 4, A pooling of French and Ger- man interests in Silesia, without al- teration of the existing frontiers, whereby Poland is included in the military agreement. 5. The provisions of the Ver- sailles treaty referring solely to |Germany, France and Belgium are | abolished with the exception of the existing Franco-German and Ger- man Belgium frontiers. 6. Signing the treaty of alliance ends the question of war guilt. All of the German Nationalist Party members, including Captain Ehrhardt, the fascist, adopted the above basis for negotiations . COMPANY UNIONS IN COTTON MILLS Facts Refute Lauding of Bosses by Writers (Continued from Page One) of the prosecution that it will re- duce the charges in the Gastonia case and also the number of de- fendants. There is no assurance that this will be done, but discussion of the possibility indicates to the | workers here that the prosecution feels that its case is weak, and if the défense can get another jury of workers and farmers, the prosecu- tion will be unable to electrocute. Reduction of the charges and the numiber on trial would reduce the number of peremptory challenges al- lowed the defense and enable the prosecution better to pack the jury with those prejudiced against the defendants and their union. It must be remmebered that some members of the prosecution staf: are still determined to demand the electric chair. They argue that a reduction of the charges would be a confession tha tthere is no real evidence against the defendants. A split in the prosecution staff, with seven of its members quitting the éase is reported in the daily papers here. Major Bulwinkle, whose con- nections with the Manville-Jenckes Co., for whom he has for long been an attorney, are notorious, is to be dropped, according to a statement by Solicitor Carpenter of Gastonia, the formal head of the prosecution. This, if true, is obviously because his leadership of the bosses’ black hundreds in the recent lynching patties they undertook has made it inadvisable from the prosecution’s point of view to use him; exposes their relationship with the mill own- ers a little too openly. : We. Bae Identify Murderer. GASTONIA, N. C., Sept, 26.-— After inquest headings yesterday here into the murder of Ella May Wiggins, shot déad by a mill own- ers’ thug Sept. 14 while riding in a truck from the National Textile Workers Union mass meeting in South Gastonia, further hearings were adjourned to Oct. 15 (ap- parently to postpone a verdict until after the trial in Charlotte of the unionists the bosses are trying to electrocute). Positive identification of J. Bor- ders, a guard at the Loray mill, as ohe of the men firing on the group of unionists, was made by F. O. Case, a witness. Borders was réleased on $3,000 bond on a charge of manslaughter. Truck Driver Released. Various other as yet unidentified thugs were described as taking part in the shootings. The driver of the union truck, George Lingerford, was ordered released. He had been ar- rested with six of the mill gunmen evidently as part of the prosecu- tion’s trick to represent the union- ists as participatnig ni the shooting, and to cloud the issue. There was absolutely no evidence aganist him. I. L. D. Lawyers Barred. Solicitor Carpenter, in charge of the “investigation,” although him- self identified as a leader of a vicious lynchng gang on Sept. 9 which kidnapped N. T. W. organ- izers and flogged Organizer Wells, continues his efforts to make it easy for the mill thugs he is nominally supposed to be trying to prosecute. R, L. Sigmund, attorney for the International Labor Defense, was present at the inquest. He tried to speak twice, the first time he was merely told to keep quiet. The sceond time Solicitor Carpenter told him if he didn’t keep quiet “I’ll put you out of here in five minutes.” | - Not. oniy i tl ag clans—the proleta: Marz (Communiat Manifesto). FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1925 Move to Enthrone Fascism in Austria Part of War Plans Against the Soviet |Metal, Shoe Strike In Belgium; Retormists Are Strike Breaking (Wireless By Inprecorr) BRUSSELS, Belgium, Sept. 26.— Metal workers in the Minerva fac- tories in Brussels, Antwerp, and |Marchienne-au-Point are striking jfor wage increases. The reformist union leaders are doing and have done their utmost to prevent the |strike before it started, and to |throttle it later. The strike ballot showed such a majority for the strike that it amounted to a heavy political defeat for the reformis Two thousand shoe workers hi also been striking here, for weeks and the reformists are strug- ing against the workers to end |this strike too. NEW TROUBLES "FOR ARMS MEET e |Other Nations Demand \U. S., Britain Unmask | A new, difficulty in the way of the Five-Power Conference on ¢eruiser and lesser ship tonnage de- velops now, according to admissions of British cabinet members to the press. The invitations to the con- |ference will be sent out by Mac- |Donald, just before he starts for America, But the ambassadors of France, Italy and Japan have al- ready intimated that their govern- ments will then demand information of England and the U. S. as to how the proposals of those two great im- | perialist powers affect their navies. | France will argue that its sub- |marines are not to be limited, as |they are not “weapons of offense,” | but are “purely defensive” craft, too |small to cross the Atlantic. Eng- |land knows this, but knows too that |they can cross the English Channel |very easily, and may come out frankly with a discussion of the possibilities of Franco-British war. | Which could not, in anybody’s opin- ion, tend to prospects for peace, Duce Hits at France. Italy has already, through a speech by Mussolini some months ago, declared herself ready to ac- |cept “as small but not smaller a navy as is allowed to any continen- tal power.” This is a direct blow at France, which demands para- mount strength in the Mediterran- ean. On the other hand, England demands Mediterranean naval pow- er equal to the combined French and Italian fleets. The difficulties seem almost im- possible of solution. Reports from Paris are that the whole French press, and particular- ly the semi-official Le Temps, are working up a propaganda casé against any reduction of the French imperialist forces, either army or navy. SOVIET AVIATORS HOP FOR SEWARD Hold Conference in Michigan Sunday (Continued from Page One) jof the Soviets will proceed to San Franciseo and thence to New York, stopping at a number of cities en route. The following log shows the pro- gtess of the flight since the flyers left Moscow, Aug, 23: Aug, 24, landed in Kurgan, Si- beria, from Moscow. Aug. 26, arrived in Novo Sibirsk, Siberia. Aug. 27, arrived in Irkusk, Si- beria. Sept. 1, arrived in Chitka, Siberia, Sept. 2, arrived in Blagoveschensk. Sept. 3, arrived in Khabarovsk, Hastern Siberia. Sept. 12, arrived in Nikolayevsk, Siberia. Bs Sept. 18, arrived at Petropay- lovsk, Kamchatka, Siberia. Sept. 21, arrived at Attu, Aleu- tian Islands. This was the first stop in American territory. Sept. 24, arrived at Dutch Har- bor, Unalaska, Alaska. Pe Kee" Michigan Conference. HAMTRAMCK, Mich., Sept. 26.— In preparation for the arrival of the Soviet flyers in this country, the Friends of the Soviet Union, which is sponsoring the reception of the four airmen, has called a con- ference for Sunday evening at 7:30 p. m, at the Russian Workers Club, 2934 Yemans Ave., this city, The econferénce will discuss the campaign to present the four flyers with several tractors and trucks as a gift from the American workers to the workers and peasants of the Soviet Union. It will also make plans for building a permanent or- ganization of the Friends of the Soviet Union in this city. Arrangements are being made to send a delegation from Detroit to New York City to represent the ception for the Soviet aviators that is being arranged there. Child Wanted CAN AFFORD OD Le AND WILLING TO ness DAILY HUISWOOD SHOWS 80 PERCENT OF Mancuso, Mine Militant, _Slaughtered in Speedup GARVEY’S LATEST POLITIGAL TRICK Debates in Jamaica on | the Class Struggle (Continued from Page One) rica, on the receiving end, | “The delegation to the convention ©/numbered about 145, with 73 from the United State Many of them came to have a show-down with Garvey. The opposition showed it- |self at a very early stage in the |eonvention. Not based on any prin- jciple, without a program, and with conflicting interests, the opposition could accomplish little. Their main demand was for removal of headquarters of the organization to America, to control the finances {here and break Garvey’s grip. Were it not for the fact that the organization is disintegrating, has lost thousands of members, and d pends on the Negroes of America for funds, the opposition would simply have been wiped out. But Garvey is no chump, he is not going to “kill the goose that lays the golden eggs.” Though he denounced his opposition as scoundrelly, he was forced to recognize its members, and place them in leading position This has alienated some of his staunch supporters and will con- tribute, to further dissentions. The convention “legislated” a number of things. It decided to buy agricultural lands, erect factories, launch a new Black Star line, adopt a social code for the Negro, es- tablish a secret service, etc. above all, it decided to raise $600,- 000,000 in the next ten years to put the program into effect. To grasp the foregoing, it must be remembered that the Garvey movement is a government in em- bryo. Not only has it a cabinet and an army, called “The Legion,” bassies in the leading countries of {the world, Throughout the proceedings of the was discussed. TT‘. problem con- fronting the Negro workers, their exploitation, and oppression by the imperialist powers were of no con- cern, In fact, Garvey expounded a new theory, African or “Race Imperial- ism.” into races and gave the separate parts of the world to the different the | c But | but it has a plan to establish em-| METAL STRIKERS (By a Worker Correspondent) } | BEECH BOTTOM, W. Va.—Sam J Mancuso, a leading member and loyal worker of the National Mine ed Union killed in the local r ative Handful here last Thursday, when a h coal cutting machine ran over him. |Mancuso was formerly president of }Local Union 105, N. M. U., Penowa, (By a Worker Correspondent) Pa., but was compelled to move to CARTERET, N. J. (By Mail)—|Beech Bottom when he was victim- The arbitration of the recent strike |ized by the Greensburg Coal Coi of 2,500 workers of the U. S. Metals |Pany, owners of the Penowa mine, Refining Corporation produced a|When he took a leading part in the Compar for Going Back “bargain” by which the aders Sttike declared by Local Union 105 | alone profited. The gains in the/@gainst a wage cut made by the) strike are insignificant and could |€Ompany several months ago. Man- Haare ais ny cont if it cus was one of the leading mem- Beye ken made 200 nee cen 2s or | paver od tha National Miners. Union, and was one of the founders of the Union. He took a leading part in the militant struggle of the Save- were not for the appointed com- mittee with “Jimmie,” the member of the William Green clique, as the rman. ; \the-Union Committee during the he men went out determined to A i rf si ; TL. strike days, and in his position as fight the bosses to the end. The - “ ie hisses shut-down the plant to seare (President .of Logal Union 2210, Beenee pee OO Y “uv. | United Mine Workers of America, the workers, This bluff did not af- fect the spirit of the strikers, and \the bosses found that the strikers was largely instrumental in having the local union affiliated in a bedy Union “WILL AVERT A‘ | STRIKE,” U, TW. said here that the company officials, § A Y § | N TENN. to # septal kept a in cess Misleader Assures the on the company grounds until after R. ayon Bosses he was dead. During this time no} notification was sent to his wife,| j who lived nearby, and none was| (By a Worker Correspondent) ) sent until after quitting time. ELIZABETHTON, Tenn. (By That the company made efforts} Mail).—Discrimination against to hide the death of Mancuso and cover it up is evidence in the fact! that when a committee of N. M, U.,by the Glanzstoff and Bemberg members commenced investigating,| rayon companies to so great an ex- no one seemed to know who was|tent that all workers at the plants killed or if any one was killed. | 546 alarmed. Day by day the be- Finally a boy was asked where did 4 % the man live who was killed. The | trayals of the workers by the United Workers fakers becomes boy replied “Which one, the one | Textile that was killed on Monday?” He did | clearer. not know of one killed on Thursday, ae oe ‘ deaiinaly (Gide adpans auc |e MOKems, S78 Pringing ees éd if tine iuine Wasa slaughter (S02 ,0% the Union: ol teials ve: ster Heted, he bay sale that atleast ers seo: nema ee Seg ee coukiy killed |4¢7 to make a pretense the U. T. W. BU Ue es Be |fakers held aconference “to take ae Se some action.” Francis Gorman, the vice-president of the U. T. W. is to the new union on organization. Mancuso lived for six hours after the machine ran him over. union members has been carried on nor |meant business. | Defeated, the company officials| jappealed to the mayor of Carteret | |and the chief of police. These influ- | enced the committee, ins§sting that | a’ vote be taken to see how many| |workers are for and how many} against the strike. In the presence lof these two politicians the com |mitee deided to place the question |m.e workers of Anderton have start- before the strikers vote. __|ed to rebel against the miserable The leaders dreamed of becoming | conditions and the low wages which jfamous “leaders” like the William|they have to endure. | Green type of the American Federa-| Workers ; etican Fe in two sanitary pipe tion of Labor and “Jimmie” 8¢-|foundries went on strike demanding quisced to the corrupt practices of Wa aac e. |higher wages and better working ie Erving system. |conditions. About a thousand work- We voted as per order of the/ers are employed in both plants. | committee. But not all of us went |The molders are the highest paid in to the company’s polling place. Out the two plants. Thirty-five dollars of 2,500 only 700 cast their votes.|— week is the limit they get. Thus 1,800 men, plus 275 who voted) Helpers are hired by the molders against ‘returning to work, or the|themscives, a helper getting from | total of 2,075 workers, did not want |eiq to $19 a week. When the molder. to accept the bosses’ terms of set- |i, thfough paying the helper he has | oul |$25 left for himself. The companies This is proved by the fact that|foree the molders to pay for the the Tank and Casting Department) helpers out of their own pockets. Anderton, Alabama , Sanitary Pipe Co. | Workers Go on Strike! (By a Worker Correspondent) | ANDERTON, Ala. (By Mail) — ‘ | doing his most to stem the militancy Introduce Piece Work |ot the workers. and Speedup System in} AutomaticSprinklerCo. | He told a committee of business men that he will: do his best to avert a strike. Meanwhile the rayon companies have warned all workers that they YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (By Mail). | will be victimized if they go on —The Automatic Sprinkler Co.|strike. Many workers here do not bosses have recently introduced a|believe that a strike will be called. new system by which they make|They claim that the U.T.W, will more profits out of the workers. A|come to some sort of “agreement” piece work system was introduced |with the plant owners. and tho we resisted it strongly it was finally forced upon us. And|, Only 1,000 workers os of see now we can already see the results.|°¢.°n® to the .|.W. The readers of the Daily Worker should expect. In the pipe shop where previously two men produced 100 to 120 pipes | nother sell-out by the U.T.W. of- now under piece work they produce | *i<ials. 350-400 a day. This was so profit-| Only the National Textile Work- able for the bosses that they are |@rs Union will fight and is fighting trying to put the laborers on piece |the battles of all the textile work- work. ers. What did it mean for us? Twenty men have already been fired in the pipe shop alone. Since the speed-| D speed-/ Japan Unions Demand up was introduced more accidents | (By a Worker Correspondent) | J. A. Re convention, not one practical issue | He said: “God divided men | are still out. The interesting thing is that the copy of the ballot and |the method of balloting was pub- |lished in the Elizabeth papers, four |hours before the committee met to | decide on it! “Jimmie” reported to us that | when the committee asked five cents | per hour raise the management “sincerely and humanely convinced us that the company cannot afford |to add $150,000 to its yearly pay- Common laborers are paid from 0¢cur daily. A few weeks ago a 25 cents to 30 cents an hour. Most |Worker cut his finger and the com- of these laborers are Negroes. pany forced him to return to work These two shops are completely | Within 15 days or lose his job. He |tied up by the strike. The companies |"eturned to work, the wound still have made an attempt to recruit |)Pen, so that grease got in. scabs, but were unsuccessful. Unless we organize a union to —ANDERTON SLAVE. | protect us against these things we |will be used by the bosses as they | want to. increased tremen- | Refining have —RED SPRINKLER. dously, Ses Repeal of Vicious Law, FUKAGAWA, Japan, (By Mail). —Prior to the inauguration meet- ing here of the Congress of All- Industrial Labor Unions, the local police at the order of the Home Of- fice seized the agenda for the meet- ing and ordered all items stricken off relating to the Pan-Pacific Labor Conference at Vladivostok and the reestablishment of the races: Europe to the whites, Asia roll.” . to the brown, and Africa to the| The bosses scored the victory, but Negroes.” And he said: “The U. N.| not with the strikers, They won only I, A. is going through the course of | With the committee, ; establishing an empire—racial im-| The workers will come out again perialism.” {sooner or later because the strike “As a delegate from the American | is not settled but “Jimmie” and his Negro Labor Congress,” said Huis-| committee will be out of the scene. wood, “I challenged his theme, his| The company's argument on thé business schemes, and his sincerity. | “impossibility of adding $150,000 Exposing the fraud and pointing out | yearly to the payroll” was a lie be- the futility of his program, I out- | cause the prices quoted in the mar- lined the program of the A. N, L. C.| kets in Nc-- York show they can After my speech, he challenged me|Pay many times that, The prices to a debate. He was accepted, and| of lead, zinc, copper :~1 all other the debate was attended by about| metals refined by the U. S. Metals 3,000 people, mostly his followers. | It provided an excellent opportunity | to place before the masses our pro- cently when the longshoremen Next time we strike we will win | an increase, and we will abolish the seven-day week slavery and win | overtime at time and a half. Next time the workers here will think when they select the leaders | of their struggle ag-inst slavery. | William Green does not represent | the workers but his organization is a subsidiary of the industrial spying system and every worker conscious of his rights must keep away from that orga ‘zation and follow the leadership of the Metal Trades Workers Learue. —U. S. METALS RE- FINING WORKER. ae Editor’s Note:—The betrayal of | the Working Class From the Bot- gram, to destroy the illusions creat- ed by Garvey, to expose his fraudu- lent business schemes, to show him | walked off the job, demanding a Rodo Hyogikai, the left wing labor federation. The new congress unani- mously demanded the repeal of the infamous Peace Preservation Law. Build Up the United Front of tom Up—at the Enterprises! Indian Summer Days at CAMP NITGEDAIGET ARE WELL REMEMBERED! Come out now and enjoy yourself. higher wage, and went to Garvey to help them in their struggle, he told them: “. .. I would advise you to go back to work. Your strike | would be effective if there were no- class the world over, destroying |body to replace you. What is the capitalism and establishing a work-|use of striking now, when probably ing class government, could the|in one hour they would have péople Negro and white and other workers | to do the work you are doing, and hope to attain emancipation. The| Probably at a cheaper wage.” response shown by the workers| Garvey thus acted as a strike- after the debate, and their readiness | breaker and tool of the employers, up as a misleader. It allowed us to | point out to the workers that only through solidarity of the working the U. S. Metals Refining strikers could not have occurred had the strikers been under the leadership of the Métal Trades Workers Unity League, which is based on shop com- mittees in the metal industry plants. Had picket lines been formed and immediately thr-wn around the U. S. Metals Refining plant, the strik- ers would have won heir demands. | The sell-out arbitration by the committee showed, as the above The First Working Class Camp————Entirely Rebuilt. 175 new bungalows—electric light DIRECTIONS—Take the Hudson River Day Line Boat—twiee daily—75 cents. Take car direct to camp—20 cenits. CAMP NITGEDIAGET BEACON, N. Y, workers of Michigan at the big re-|, measure of success obtained.” But Garvey is slowly changing his policies, Huiswood found. He} changes them to suit certain local conditions in Jamaica. For the pres- ent, at least, he is putting his “Back to Africa” program on the shelf, He is going in for politics in the island of Jamaica, and to this end he has organized the “People’s Political Party.” He has also announced his candidacy for the legislative coun- cil of the Island, and is putting for- ward candidates in all the election distriets. While his political program is tinged with liberalism, he has come out in unmistakeable terms for cap- italism. In one of his articles, Gar- vey says: “Capitalism is necessary to the progress of the world, and) those who are unreasonably and| wantonly fighting against it are) enemies to human advancement, but | there should be a limit to individual | or corporate use of control of it.” During the debate he had this to say: “If we dare destroy the cap-| italists, we are going to destroy the | means of getting some of the good | things of the world.” | This is not surprising, for re- eposits made on oF aay ot “Yeo the ‘ts Last Quartefly Dividend paid on all amounts from $5.00 to $7,500.00, at the rate of Open Mond: Nerd gifondara fall day) unti Ban! Ww 1 Wot to be organized is indicative of the | the United Fruit Co., against which | the strike was directed. That he is trying to ally himself with the bourgeoisie of the island and to gain their support can be seen from the aid he is giving to on? of the most labor-hating candi- dates for mayor. Garvey is not concerned with ihe plight of the workers of Jamaica. He is not concerned with the op- pressed and exploited masses who are at the mercy of big foreign cor- porations, the absentee landlords and the local bourgeoisie. The mis- erable pittance paid these workers, the poverty they suffer, does not make any impression on _ this “Moses.” But the workers of Jamaica are rapidly realizing the cause of their bad condition. They are awaken- ing to the fact that only through their own organized might can they secure any betterment of their con- ditions. And when they become class-cons¢ious, when they know the road to freedom from exploitation and poverty, they will turn on their masters and on Garvey, the mis- leader, and push them off the earth as the real “enemies to human bet- terment.” ASSETS EXCEEDING $29,000,000 before the 3rd the month will draw interest day of 42% 17 P.M. ety Accounts Accepted. A. B. A, Traveters Certified Checks worker points out, that the Amer-/| ican Federation of Labor is but an adjunct of the bosses ying sys- tem. b Telephone Beacon 731. N. by getting behind the Eighth Avenue, 49th and 50th OCTOBER 3, 4, 5, Leave all your buyin Madison Square Gard Thursday, October 3rd Friday, October 4th.. Saturday, October 5th Sunday, Octobet 6th..... 4 Total. ...csseeeee 4482.50 Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday Combitiation for all four days. Y. Telephone Eastabrook 1400 Answer the Attacks of the Social Fascists Against the DAILY WORKER MORNING FREIHEIT BAZAAIR MADISON SQUARE GARDEN Streets 6 ® for those days because en will be turned into A FOUR-DAY DEPARTMENT STORE On Sale at Daily Worker, 26 Union Square, New York

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